† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Grant No. XDB07020200), the National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant Nos. 2016YFA0300502 and 2015CB921304), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 11634015).
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is one of the most powerful tools to explore new quantum states of condensed matter induced by high magnetic fields at a microscopic level. High magnetic field enhances the intensity of the NMR signal, and more importantly, can induce novel phenomena. In this article, examples are given on the field-induced charge density wave (CDW) in high-Tc superconductors and on the studies of quantum spin liquids. We provide a brief introduction to the high magnetic field NMR platform, the station 4 of the Synergetic Extreme Condition User Facility (SECUF), being built at Huairou, Beijing.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is widely used to characterize the properties of new materials in physics, chemistry, and biology. The most important requirements of the NMR technique are magnets with high field strength B0, high homogeneity, and high stability. Large B0 is essential to boost the NMR signal intensity, which is proportional to
Magnetic fields can suppress superconducting (SC) transition temperature Tc, and reveal novel states hidden below Tc. For example, NMR study on cuprate high-Tc superconductors Bi2Sr2−xLaxCuO6+δ (Bi2201) shows that when the superconductivity is completely suppressed, a metallic pseudogap state appears as the ground state.[3,4] When a high magnetic field (HMF) is applied perpendicular to the CuO2 plane of YBa2Cu3O7−y (YBCO), charge density wave (CDW) is found below the superconducting dome.[5] Recently, 63Cu-NMR measurement on single-layered Bi2Sr2−xLaxCuO6 discovered a long-range CDW induced by an in-plane field, setting in even far above the superconducting dome.[6] Magnetic field is also an important parameter in the studies of quantum spin liquids.[7,8]
High-Tc superconductivity is obtained by doping a Mott insulator,[9] and the spin interaction is believed to be important for the superconductivity.[10] However, the electron pairing mechanism is still elusive, largely because the normal-state properties are not well understood.[11,12] For example, at low carrier concentration region p (0 < p < 0.2), there appears a pseudogap, where partial density of states (DOS) is suppressed below a characteristic temperature T * well above Tc.[13] Application of a high magnetic field is useful to study the ground state properties of the pseudogap and to diagnose the interplay between various orders in the cuprates.
NMR measurements on Bi2Sr2−xLaxCuO6+δ carried out under high magnetic fields revealed the complete phase diagram. When superconductivity is suppressed completely, the pseudogap ground state is revealed. As shown in Fig.
In YBCO, when superconductivity is suppressed, 63Cu NMR at H = 28.5 T revealed a long-range charge density modulation perpendicular to the CuO-chain in the sample with p = 0.108.[14] Resonant elastic and inelastic x-ray spectroscopy also indicated that a high field induces a correlation along the CuO-chain direction and modifies the coupling between the CuO2 bilayers, thus causing a three-dimensional CDW.[15,16] These observations are consistent with early discovery of a Fermi-surface reconstruction by quantum oscillations.[17] As the long-range CDW onsets below Tc(H = 0) and only emerges when the field is applied perpendicular to the CuO2 plane, a widespread speculation is that it is due to incipient CDW in the vortex cores[18] that becomes overlapped as the field becomes stronger.[19–21] In fact, a field as large as 28.5 T applied in the CuO2-plane of YBCO did not bring about any long-range CDW.[14]
Recently, a breakthrough for this issue was made by high magnetic field NMR on Bi2201. A high magnetic field parallel to the Cu–O bond direction (H ‖ a or b axis) in Bi2201, which does not create vortex cores in the CuO2 plane, induced a CDW order above the superconducting dome,[6] in contrast to that in YBCO where CDW appears below Tc(H = 0).[14,21] As shown in Fig.
The phase diagram shown in Fig.
A quantum spin liquid (QSL) is a system with magnetic interaction among spins but has no long range magnetic order down to zero temperature. It is characterized by the pattern of long-range quantum entanglement that has no classical counterpart. It was proposed as a mechanism for high-temperature superconductivity[24] and as a material system for topological quantum computation.[25] The pursuit of QSL has a long history. We introduce two examples in which the magnetic field has played an important role in establishing the QSL states and in characterizing the properties of the new states.
Zn doped barlowite Cu3Zn(OH)6FBr with a Kagome lattice (Fig.
The compound α-RuCl3 has a honeycomb lattice and bond-directional Ising-type interactions on the three distinct links. Unfortunately, this system undergoes a phase transition to a magnetically ordered state at T = 8 K. However, recent 35Cl NMR measurements suggested that a magnetic field about 8 T can suppress such long-range ordered state and induces a gapless QSL state (Fig.
Although high magnetic field NMR can be performed at several facilities in the world with magnet field up to 45 T using resistive or SC/resistive hybrid magnets, the running cost is huge. For example, a huge power of about 30 MW is consumed at 45 T, which limits the experimental time. The sample size is also limited due to insufficient homogeneity. China is presently developing the high magnetic field technique and has built a hybrid magnet at 40 T,[26] which promotes frontier researches on condensed matter physics, material science, chemistry, and life science. Meanwhile, China is also building hybrid superconducting high field magnets for special applications. A high magnetic field NMR platform as the station 4 of SECUF and also a quantum oscillation measurement platform as the station 2 of SECUF will be built at Huairou, Beijing. The high-magnetic-field laboratories around the globe and the parameters of some of their magnets are listed in Table
The high magnetic field NMR platform will integrate a solid-state NMR spectrometer with a domestic-made 25 T superconducting magnet which consists of a conventional low-temperature and a novel high-temperature superconductor. The high-temperature superconducting magnet, which has low running cost and provides unlimited duration of the experiments, will be built by Institute of Electric Engineering (IEE), CAS. It will have a homogeneity of 10 ppm/cm3 and a stability of 10 ppm/h, which are satisfactory for solid-state NMR. The cold bore with the size of 50 mm is capable for a cryostat with large sample space to accommodate components such as pressure cell, sample rotator, and so on. A dilution refrigerator will be installed to probe microscopic properties of matter down to 20 mK. NMR spectrometers and probes with auto-tuning capability over a frequency range of 1 MHz to 400 MHz are being built. Figure
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